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Clinton's new visa proposal
By Sridhar Krishnaswami
WASHINGTON, MAY 12. The U.S. President, Mr. Bill Clinton, has
asked Congress to increase the number of temporary visas for
highly skilled workers to 200,000 for each of the next three
years. This would mean an 80 per cent increase in the present
levels of the H-1B visa category if law-makers go along with the
plan. The White House has also proposed to raise fees that
employers would have to pay under the visa programme so as to
fund job training for American technology workers.
The administration is responding to pressures from the high
technology industries like Microsoft and Intel which say that
there is a severe shortage in the market for the skilled category
and that the present number of visas are not adequate. ``The caps
have already been hit and there is clearly a greater demand than
there is availability'', argued Mr. Gene Sperling, the head of
the President's National Economic Council in a message to
Congress.
The current annual limit on the H-1B category has been fixed at
115,000 and the visas granted from India accounts for nearly 50
per cent of the total. Although there is bipartisan support to
allow high technology industries to hire foreign workers, the
increase in the H-1B visas has been resisted by the American
labour unions who argue that locals lose out in the job market.
The Democrats and those law-makers on Capitol Hill who have a
labour constituency, have successfully pressured the
administration to cough up more money for job training for
American technology workers. In fact, under the latest White
House proposal, there is a four-fold raise in the fee that
employers would have to pay for each hired worker - from the
present $ 500 to $ 2000. Additionally, for employers who use the
H-1B visas for more than 15 per cent of their workforce, the fee
has been raised to $ 3000.
The Clinton administration has not merely confined itself to
changes on the fees front for employers on the H-1B visas. Under
the new proposals, there is also a plan that would boost to 50
per cent by fiscal 2003 that holders of the particular visa
should have a Master's degree; and some 10,000 visas have been
set apart for research institutions and universities.
Aside from the overall objections to the H-1B visa, increase from
some law-makers, a troublesome part of the administration's
proposal has to do with a package that also calls upon Congress
to allow immigrants from Haiti, El Salvador and Honduras to
qualify for the same type of favourable consideration for
residency as do immigrants from Cuba or Nicaragua, an idea that
has been rejected by the Chairman of the House Judiciary
Committee, Mr. Henry Hyde.
The latest proposal from the White House on the H-1B visas comes
at a time when there are at least two considerations on Capitol
Hill, one of which is similar to what is now being proposed by
the administration. But there is also a bill in the House of
Representatives that has been introduced by the Republican from
Texas, Mr. Lamar Smith, calling for suspending the caps on H-1B
visas for three years but would include stipulations such as
companies under the programme having to prove that they have
increased their American work force and not having replaced local
workers with ``lower paid'' foreigners.
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